.1 Av- ..u._-u- 1 . 811ieGuanIlsa.Oharlottetowa,rrI.oct.1s.1nez. SPORTS FRONT By PIUS CALLAGHAN , Quite A Battle THOSE Prince of Wales Oollegest. Dunstanfs Junior Var- lityfootballgarnaalwayshavebeengreataffairs :-ndthe 1962 eeasonpnomises upholdthehighstandandzethrprevlora-years Y tsmeraly hearsay butth.eheaarsayap- asdiorrghthezamewasreallyghmndingerfrounstartto city collellnns were favorites to take the measure of and Whiter: this fall. Weishmen had two games alre belts and the go; 3 all! y were facing a crew that was loaded tlg inexperience. Jack Kane fielded 19 players Wednesday who were Playing their first season in Canadian football. You would never know it ' as 3 3 The final result was Saints 18. PWC 12 and wo:d is that the battle could gone either way. Naturally Kane was elated over the way his rookies performed in this. his first year as iu.-nr'nr varsity coa."h. Saints came through the battle in fairly good shape but the Welshmen may have lost the services of fullback Bill Stannish action late in the second w a collar bone dislocation. Without the hard-working Bill, the Welshmen attack surely'is not nearly as potent. , Both colleges had large representations on hand Wednesday and there was considerable good-natured comm clone and that’: the way it should . gave it everything they had but kept these tem- pers in check throughout. We understand it will be a couple of weeks before these squads clash again but you c-an bet when they do one of the sea- son's largest crowds will be looking on. The New President OUR congratulations to Dr. Clark, Suznmerside on his re- cent appointment as president of the Island Senior Hockey Lea- We know that the genial doctor will bring to his offiice the necessary qualifies for the success of the league. Mind mu. the president himself can't make the league a success but he can keep prodding the teams and the league executive into great 5: ion. Just what teams Dr. Clark will have to work with is yet a question mark. Rumor has it that Crystals and Ewinrudes will combine their forces in the 1962-65 campaign and if such is the case, then don't be surprised if Royals and Penguins go into a ership agreement. If this comes about, then that would the RCAF. one Summerslde team and one Charlottetown 5’: E 3 to 5 P leave ( Of course. these tzhrlrmgs we are hearing may be all idle gossip and five teams may yet agree to compete in the ISI-IL tlus campaign. The next league meeting should tell the tale and after flhat we’ll be working with facts, not a lot of hearsay. At any rate. we wish the league loads of success and its new president. smooth sailing. Get Equipment BIRCIIWOOD High School has obtained football equipment and an intmanmural league is getting underway today under the dfrrection of physical educator, John Kane. Jack has pushed for proper equipment for a long time and he’s a happy man now at e equipment has come through. He believes that fine young football players can be produced right here in the Charlottetown schools and he intends to prove his point in Birchwood. Looking back to the great rugby players who came ‘out of West Kent and Queen Square in past years, we are certainly in agrrment with Kane's line of reasonin We’ll watch these school boys with Track Row Not Likely To Spread To Canada By JACK SULLIVAN (pension by the AAU of Can- Canadian Press Sports Editor iada." Twigg said.’ TORONTO (CP) —— The lngl And if a Canadian not hold- hassle over control of track and .ing an AAU card competes in field in the United States be-[such a meet “that athlete tween the National Collegiate would possibly be dxsqualxfxed Athletic Association and e‘ um ever being a member of Amateur Athletic Union isn’t d this. In effect. ‘ would mean he would not b likely to spread to Canada, _ says a highly - placed American ‘able to compete for Canada in : Olympic. British Empire or amateur sportsman. ‘ _ H _ Col. Donald F. Hull of New ‘Pan-American Games. TWISE York, executive director of the’said AAU of the U,s,_ said in an in.l A Canadian Track and Field tel-View Thursday that a sim.1Coa¢-hes Association was set up liar battle couldn’t happen in this country because the AAU works closely with school“ groups and with p-level ath- letic college directors. His views were confirmed by Ken Twigg of Toronto, national chairman of the AAU track and field committee, who said there is no trouble. And he doesn’t expect any Col. I-lull hassle and said: ' NCAA is a power-hun- 8. real interest. 0 trying to ‘of track and field in Canada. ‘Officials said basic aims of the association were to r se the ‘standard of track and field ‘coaching. to facilitate exchange -‘of information regarding coach- {lug methods and rate , ‘with all sports governing bodies spoke freely of the ;aud other groups interested in ' gtlve advancement of track and {field in Canada. Lt. Col. Leo F‘. MacDonald. principal. of Birchwood High [ School, is seen here adjust- ing football helmet on Grade X student. Billy Weatherbie. marked the occasion of Birchwood acquiring complete BIG DAY FOR FOOTBALL football equipment for 80 players. The principal stated that all monies for the pull’- chase of this equipment were raised through vanious school projects. Physical educator at the school. John Kane, has four senior teams in opera- , three intermediates and two juniors. Only the seniors will wear the equipment. The four-team intra-mural senior league swings into action this afternoon at 4 o'clock at Memorial Field. I Saint Dunstan‘s Varsity foot- Jball squad hangs out the wel- come mat this Saturday after- noon for Acadia Axemen in a regular Atlantic Football Con- ference tussle. Saints have yet to taste vic- tory this season. They came closest at Fredericton on Sept- ember $ when they battled the Red Bombers of UNB to a 7-7 stalemate. They lost contests at home to Sahearwater Flyers and St. Mary's Huskies and dropped Ex-Ball Star Dies Wednesday CANTON. Mass. (AP)—Olaf Henriksen. 74, one -' time out- a star against New York Giants. died Wednesay. l-le was a member of the Red Sex from 1911 through 1917. He won fame for a pinch-hit single which drove in the tying run against the Giants in the sev- enih World Series game. which e ox won. Saints Host Axemen Sat.; Patriot Donates Plaque a 2-0 to Mount Al- lison at Sackville on '1lh-a:nl:s- giving Day. The Axemen own two verdicts in five tries. They topped Dal- housie and the Univversity of New Brunswick but fell victims to Stadacona. St. Mary’: and ount lison. The local Red and Whiters are in better shape for ' game then they have been_a.il season. Their have re- sponded well and coach Ed Hil- ton expects a full squad (Bob Simmons, of course, is out for the season) to go after the Wolf- ville students Saturday. «Football fans should see two evenly matched teams at work and this contest could produce the greatest tihrills of-the entire players again are competing for The Evening Pat- riot award which goes to the player adjudged the most valu- able to his team throughout the entire season. Last season Frank Garrity copped this prize and of course the Maine native will be gunning to do a repeat this season. A plaque was donated HUNTER’S CORNER Numbers Of B|acklDuc|<s Are Reduced To Low Level 1- On Tuesday of this week. Mr. . this province will be either oct- ]'Bartlett. call upon me. As you may have guessed the current local black duck situation was the topic] under discussion. We were in‘ complete agreement that it ' our local black ducks that ab-. sorb the opening day’: casual-l ties and their numbers. as a ‘ to this province. have- been reduced to a dangerouslyl low level. True the odd north-} era black duck, with the red legs and yellow bill, is some- times bagged on opening day. I have shot a few over the years 1 especially when thousands of, blacks congregated at Fnas ' Beaver Dam in the thirties and ‘U = (D tion of the heavy black duck ‘ he ,v. well - heeled organization and it has a master plan to con- trol all amateur athletics in .WH'l To Have 'Pension Plan and Field Federation, is hurt-, ing development of e sport and undoubtedly will seriously hurt America’s chances in inter- national competition, including the Olympic games." ATTENDING CONVENTION Col. I-lull, here to attend the three-day annual convention of the AAU of Canada. gave his side of the NCAA-AAU dispute at the opening general session. He expanded on h remarks later in an interview. The long - established AAU. holds what he described as trump card in the dispute. The International Amateur Athletic Federatlion. mling e d 5‘ Western Hockey League. (ready has three reluctant con- ltributors. headed by voluble icy Hall. The plan calls for matching player and league contributions of at least 8250 a year. b it also builds up with eac fine -‘levied against players and man- .gement. That's how Hall got ilnio the act. The San Francisco Seals owner ridiculed game officials -alter Seals‘ first two games last week. and a $200 fine levied by WHL president Al Leder was 0 5 _, added to the pot. In Edmonton, Flyer defence» ,mau John hfinuk was fined ‘for shoving s linesman Oct. 11 concentration at Pisquid Pond, Rice field simply hedge hopped across to Fraser‘: when the) opening morning barrage be-. gan. Pisquid Pond rice was a favourite spot to spend the night. of the opinion that the New- foundiand and Labrador black ducks, with the red legs a d yellow hills that provincial duck hunters refer to as ‘Northern blacks‘. arrive in this province too late to take the pressure off our oc blacks. He stated it was his findings that the ht of northern blacks did not arrive in this province until an approximate date of October 15 . I have always contended that this flight of ‘red legs’ would patronize inland ponds, marshes and rivers there were any local blacks worth the name to act as de- coys.- on -the contrary they\are raftedou onourbanandec . ' ficer that. unless the opening of the duck season. is applied to 13 could early forties. A goodly propor- 5" Mr. Bartlett told me he was an Federal Migratory ‘ ober 15th or 20th...preferably the Bird Officer. Sackville. made a ‘a“°"~ 1" ""3 “Y5 when ""3 uck season opened on the Am- (1 iherst marshes on September and in this province on October 1st long skeins of ducks be seen crossing the Strait for P.E.I. It was Prince County that derived the most marked benefits ‘from this tem- porary migration. Now the duck season opens here on October 1st and on the Amherst marsh- es, and in that general area of Nova Scotia, on 8th. I am inclined to take. with a grain of salt. the contention by local duck hunters that our black ducks left for the Am- herst marshes with the first ver on the ning morning. Someone must have mi taken By BRUCE STOVEL MONTREAL (CP) — Mont- treal Canadiens regained their last-season form in the last pe- e League play Thursday night. ’ The score was tied 2-2 going ’ period, but goals by Bernie (Boom Boom) Geof- frion and Ralph Backstrom had ii‘ in st pe- riod after a lacklustre effort by Mcntreal. The win gives Montreal four points. one more than Term: and three less than league-lead- ing Detroit. who defeated Bos- ton Thursday night. Montreal is in a three-way tie for second place with Boston and Chicago. Leafs are in fifth place 8 Canadiens were badly ont- played in the first period and only sparkling work by substi- tute goalie Cesare Maniago kept Leafs from scoring more than two goa . Both Toronto goals in the first Kent Douglas‘: drive from the point picked the corner less than a minute later. Canadiens came back in the second to tie the score. Henri Richard beat Toronto goalie Jc nny Bower cleanly with a lo 20-footer at 6:22 and Jean Beliveau got a gift goal when Tc-ronto defenceman Bob Baun slapped the puck into the net while trying to clear Beliveau's wide an e shot at 16:49. Canadiens caught fire in the third period and veteran Bernie Geoffrion’s deflection on a goal- mouth pass by linemate Gilles Trcmblay at 8:34 was followed in little more than a minute by Bacstrom's goal, w 25- 1110 fair. with solid play by footer driven between Bower‘: legs -one break. The game was mainly .a scrambly. loosely - played ef- the Tor- onto defence controlling ac in the first two periods. Canadlens were outshot 32-23. with’ Leafs outsbootlng them in the first period. The game was cleanly played. with 11 penalties awarded. 10 ‘E to the college last year and; Ganri'ty’s name was tirst on the list. Each year the winner's name will be added to this col- lege plaque but’ the winner gets a plaque which he keeps for himself. ‘ _ Again Inspector A. S. Mac- Neil and Frank Curtis will work with coach Hilton in selecting this this player. It was this same trio that named Garrity as the most valuable Saint in. 1961. Saturday's game is scheduled to get going promptly at 2 o'clock. Yonkers Bids For Classic YONKERS. N.Y. (AP)—In aw bid to return the I-lambletonian Stakes to New York state. Yonkers Raceway said Thurs- th mated value of the three-year- old trotting classic to $250,000. The Hambletonlan would be returned to its old home at Gocd Time Park, Goshen, N.Y. Since 1957. the Hambletonlan has been held at Du Quoin, Iil., which has a contract to hold the race again in 1963. In a meeting at Du Quoin Aug. 30 e Hambletonian Society de- ferred action on four bids until a meeting in New York City Bowling Results Are Announced SUMMERSIDE Here are the results of games played in the Summerside ' League to October 17 at Crest Lanes bowling centre: High single game. Frank Grandy 329 High three games. Doug Tuc- 805 Team high single Screwballs 11%. Team high three games, Pope Motors 3139. >r (D -1 891119. STANDINGS Tigers 18 Pope Motors 18 Swordfish 16 Ambassadors 15 Warrens Texaco 15 eptunm 14 Modern Cleaners 13 Scnewballs 13 CTL 13 Clippers 11 Canadian Legion 10 Gaudet's Save-Easy 8% Town Taxi 8 Falcons 8 Spuds 7% Comstoek 7 Journal Pioneer 7 Se 4 Rogers & Arnett 4 Police 4 Club 24 3 Kensington All Stars 1 DETROIT (AP) — Th e un- 'beaten Detroit Red Wings went on a scoring spree Thursday night with four players notching goals and held off Boston Bruins 5-3 in a game between the two surprise teams of the National Hockey League. The Wings. strengthening their hold on first place to three points, packed three goals into the first period in handing the Bruins their first defeat of the new season. Detroit has three victories and a tie in four games and'is the only club with- out a loss. The Red Wings and Bruins were the two teams that failed to qualify for the Stanley Cup playoffs last year. ‘ Norm Ullman scored two goals for the Wings, who took a 5-1 lead midway through the final period. But the Bruins made it close on goals by Cliff Pennington and Irv Spencer withn a sceond span Alex Delvecchio. celebrating his 400th consecutive game. sent Detroit into a lead just 36 see- onds after the start and Ullman Halos Regain Old/(Form; Defeat Maple Leafs minors and onehmiscouduct-— Geoffrion for talking back. - period: 1. Toronto, Duff 1 (Horton. Arm ) 4'1 ' ronto. (Pollard: tlon Stewart) 4:5 . Penalties-— G. Tremblay. Geoffrlon (miscon- duct) 3:56. Harris 7:10.‘ Douglas 12:34. Brewer 13:16, Richard :41 Second period: 3. Montreal, Richard 8 (Provost, Talbot) .Wings“ Extend Streak; ‘ Topple Boston Bruins 543‘ made it 2-0 before the 10-minute mark. Marcel Pronovost .and 11 1 Gordie Howe scored the other Detroit goals. Wayne Hicks scored Bostons first goal midway through the first periods. First period: 1. Detroit. Del- vecchio 1 (Howe, Gadsby) 0:36; 2. Detroit. Ullman 1 (M. Prono- vost, Smith) 9:51; 8. Boston, Hicks 1 (Pennington, Spencer) 13:27; 4. Detroit. M. Pronovost 1 (D e 1 v e cchio. Macdonald) 13:55. Penalties — Smith 1:57, Godfrey and Howe 13:50. Second period: 5. Detroit, Howe 1 8:24. Pena|ties—Young 5:12, Spencer 7:59. Howe 9:51. A. Pronovost 11:30. Third period: 6. Detroit, Ull- man 2:(Stasiuk, Gadsby) 8:53; 6:22; 4. Montreal. Beliveau 1 16:59. Penaltles—Brewer 9:50, Shack. Backstromlilzlz. period: 5. Montreal, Geoffrlon -1 (G. Trernblay. Ma;-. shall) 8:34: 6. Montreal. Back. strom 1 (Berenson. Gauthier) 9:50. Penalties -— Horton 4:07, Geoffrion 5:27. Saves: Bower Maniago < 7. Boston, Pennington 2 (Mohns) : 2; 8. Boston, Spencer 2 (Pennington, en) 11: . B:aaity—Sl!encer 13:22. - Sayes: Perreault Sawchuk 8 12 11--31 10 2 5 3-18 \ FOR... ALL YOUR CAR NEEDS! Rebuilt Engines. Automatics. Generators. StarteI‘I.\ I've) Pumps, lleads. Cranks. Water Pumps. A complete line or accessories for '62 models." ‘Stewart Motors MacPhee Named Ump-In-Chief SAINT JOHN. N.B. (CP) — Doug Mac(Phee of Saint John has been named mnpime-(in-chief for remainder of the New Brunswick Senior baseball finals nding champion St. Peter's and Memramcook Rovers. MacP'hee's appointment was sday by Bill announced Thur Nodwell of Saint John. senior sub issioner of the New Brunswick Baseball Association. The New Yonkers’ bid is for five years, starting in 1964. and the Hambletanian would be Sunday. ‘ ‘ raced during the five-day grand circuit meeting the first week in August. $201. Double Features Card SYDNEY (CP) — A $201 daily double on the combination Mr. ' Thursday night. Mr. Price was the lone double winner. Axvalon Ernst and Pellaire Doin Boy shared honors in the featured AB . Other “ ners were Jolly Marl, Perky Z. and Coronation Rose. .“ »‘‘i 13 ‘L”lé:‘«i. 4--88 Atlantic Football Conference ’-’A” Section Football ST. DU'N5TAN’S{A "SAlNTS" .--“,1 ACADIA "AX1EMEN” Saturday. oer. zo—z:oo um.» 'ADMlSSION: ADULTS $l.00— STUDENTS 500 s.o.u. cmrus-'—: Parking off Belvedere Ave. Nothing Held Back. Every Item Reduced ,,,. :24 Gt. George St. (-557! Enioy ' éligt Trouble - Free W Heat With SHELL STOVE & FURNACE OIL CALL - R. C. BARW|S.E DIAL 4-4316 ‘ Authorized Shell Agent for Charlottetown and West of Cheri town MALPEQUE ROAD \. BRINGING Brfmn QUAurY“iMrn. CHANDISE TO YOU For 16 Both Hoo|ey's: Men's Wear Stores... . January ll . 2 -.--._..-Y:-ii-,-i .1«£‘ \ . Gudrlanteedl lleductionsfromy mi‘ . ‘ ,~ Regular $tock...Shopdi I L